Should TSA agents carry guns? Barbara Peterson asks the question after a recent “case in New Orleans showed that someone could launch an attack propelled largely by the element of surprise.” (Condé Nast Traveler

Google launched a wireless service, Project Fi, that will offer talk, text, and data for as little as $30 a month, or “between $15 and $20 a month cheaper than many competing offers from the major carriers,” The Wall Street Journal reports. The service will work in “120+ countries,” Google says, with unlimited texts included and international calls at 20 cents a minute. What’s the catch? You have to use Google’s Nexus 6 smartphone. (WSJ)

“Is $5 a bottle too much to swallow at the airport?” Scott McCartney investigates why water—and everything else—costs so much when you buy it beyond security. (WSJ)

“On a recent morning, with the inauguration of Expo Milano 2015, the next world’s fair, less than two weeks away, the dominant soundtrack at the site on the far outskirts of the city was the deep rumble of heavy machinery,” Elisabetta Povoledo writes from the city. “Construction workers scurried around fantastically fashioned national pavilions in various states of completion, drilling, hammering, and tarring as a nursery’s worth of trees, shrubs, and flowers were planted in stretches of fresh earth.” Expo starts on May 1 and could bring 20 million people to the city this summer. (NYT)

Remote Lands, the travel outfitter, will run another “private jet experience” with Amanresorts in 2016, the company says. “The trip will take sixteen guests across Asia including Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, The Philippines, and Japan where they will fly on two Gulfstream private jets and stay in five Amanresorts in destinations including Vinh Hy Bay, Siem Reap, Luang Prabang, Palawan, and Tokyo,” Remote Lands says in a statement. The 16-person trip runs March 6 through 20 and costs $58,888 per person; it’s just the latest in a growing field of so-called private jet tours from brands like Abercrombie & Kent, Four Seasons, and TCS World Travel. (Remote Lands)

Anthem of the Seas, the brand-new Royal Caribbean ship, offer some subtle improvements over its nearly identical sister, including better pools, better entertainment, and at least one new and interesting dining option, Sherri Eisenberg reports. (Condé Nast Traveler)

A new rail link between Toronto Pearson International Airport and the city’s downtown Union Station will open on June 6. The Union Pearson Express, which was designed by Winkcreative, will make the trip in 25 minutes and cost C$27.50 (about $22.50). (Toronto Star)

New York City-area airports were supposed to start offering free Wi-Fi across all terminals in the fall of 2014, but “there are still major holes in the promised Wi-Fi coverage at these airports,” Harriet Baskas reports. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey says at least six terminals at JFK, LaGuardia, and Newark Liberty have free (if ad supported) Wi-Fi at least half of the time. (USA Today)

Baha Mar, the super-resort in the Bahamas that was initially scheduled to open in December, has yet again pushed back its opening to July—leading HotelChatter to wonder if “Baha Mar [will] ever recover from this very public embarrassing setback?” (HotelChatter)

The Westin New York Grand Central will, for the second year, offer free tours of its rooftop garden this summer to anyone who signs up. The hotel sources many of its vegetables and herbs from the 41st-floor space, which also has killer views of the Chrysler and Empire State Buildings. Reservations are required and can be made by emailing shareyourexperience@westin.com.